1.
Turning
towards God -
An Introduction
to Christian Spirituality
I was only nine
years old when I learned my first lesson in philosophy thanks to the
conjurer at my friend's birthday party. I was chosen to examine the inside
of his top hat to prove that there was nothing in it. Then he proceeded to
decorate the room with its contents draping everything in sight with silk
handkerchiefs, flags and bouquets of flowers. Finally, to everyone's
amazement, he put his hand into the hat and produced a large white rabbit.
When I told my
father what I'd seen he said I'd been deceived, because he couldn't
possible have taken something out of nothing. If there was nothing in the
hat then nothing could have come out of it. There was either something
hidden inside it that I hadn't seen, or something hidden up the conjurer's
sleeve, or in the table on which he'd place the hat. My father wasn't a
spoilsport he was just trying to teach me something that I've never
forgotten. Something cannot come from nothing.
If something
can't come from nothing then, there must always have been something. It
doesn't take an Einstein therefore to work out that absolutely nothing can
do nothing, let alone be responsible for creating the world. The 'Big
Bang' then, or whatever else brought the Universe into being, cannot have
been preceded by nothing. It must have been preceded by something.
The first and
most important message that Christianity teaches is that this something is
in fact 'Someone', in whom the most potent power in creation, which is
love, is to be found in its fullness. No matter how sophisticated it might
be some thing cannot produce love, love comes from someone for only a
person can love. That’s why the Gospel states quite clearly that God is
love. That's what he was, that's what he is, and that's what he always
will be, and that’s what he does. So I suppose it would be more accurate
to say that God is not so much love but loving, because that’s what does
all the time.
The second is
that his love progressively penetrated the human nature of Jesus Christ.
It was the tangible experience of being loved by God that was the source
of his inner security and strength. It made him the most perfect and the
most loveable person to have walked on this earth.
The third is that
Christ himself made it clear, that his prime purpose in life was to
transmit to other human beings the self-same love that animated him until
they could experience it as he did. Then, to the measure that they
received it they would be made ever more perfect human beings. Prayer is
the word traditionally used to describe the way in which a person freely
chooses to turn towards God to receive and then to assimilate this love
'til it unites us with him.
The
Holy Spirit and the Spiritual Life.
Human beings are
made of body and spirit, so when they get it right their love is both
spiritual and physical at one and the same time. However God has no body,
so when he loves, he loves with his Spirit alone. As a mark of reverence
therefore, his love has been traditionally called The Holy Spirit.
The
Spiritual life is the expression used to describe a new way of life
organized by someone, who wants to start turning towards God regularly, in
order to receive his love or his Holy Spirit. First and foremost this
means building a prayer life that leads
through meditation to contemplation
where a person is turned towards God and more open to receiving his love
than ever before. It means building an ascetical
life too. In other words a life in which they try to see to it,
that all other loves take second place to the love that they have chosen
to receive from God. Gradually, if all goes well, they will begin to
experience the mystical life stirring within
them. The phrase mystical life just means hidden life and is used in the
Christian tradition to describe the unseen love of God, as it begins to
make itself felt within the person who perseveres in opening themselves to
receive it. As this experience grows with the years they come to
experience the self-same life that animated Jesus Christ, transforming
them into the same sort of person that he was, whilst preparing them to
become the same sort of person that he is now.
A
Primary Principle of the Spiritual Life: -
Love
cannot be forced on anyone, not even by God.
Love is the most
potent form of energy on earth. However it differs from all other forms of
energy because it cannot be forced on anyone. We can only receive the love
that relentlessly surges out of God therefore, by freely choosing to love
him, for it is in loving that we open ourselves to be loved and to the
experience of being loved. This is a commonplace truth for anyone who has
been in love. However when we first start to pray the real truth is that
we'll feel a million miles away from God, and all talk of loving him, as
we usually understand the word, just doesn't add up. However a start has
to be made, so prayer begins with the object of getting to know God -
after all it doesn't make sense to talk of loving someone when you don't
even know them.
Now, we get to
know God in the same sort of way that we get to know anyone else. We may
go clubbing with them, have a game of tennis with them, we may go out for
a meal, or even invite them to spend their holidays with us, but in the
end we only get to know them by sharing a conversation with them. We only
get to know people by talking to them and what's more important, by
listening to what they've got to say to us. There is no other way. Getting
to know God isn't an exception to the rule. That's why all prayer must
begin by holding conversations with him, but most important of all by
listening to him.
As we get to know
him more deeply, love will gradually begin to grow slowly but surely.
However there will be no genuine progress until our perseverance begins to
demonstrate that we are turning to God in genuine love, not just for what
we get out of him. Then we will begin to receive as never before, because
we have never acted so selflessly towards God before
The
Focal Point of Prayer
For some, prayer
begins by turning to God in himself, whilst others prefer to turn to him
as embodied in the human nature of Jesus Christ. Most people, who pray
seriously do both, emphasizing one approach then another, as their
spiritual life unfolds for reasons that will become apparent.
Four principal things have to be
learnt, if prayer is going to grow and blossom into what it is meant to
be. Firstly Speaking with God, secondly listening
to God thirdly Receiving from God and
fourthly Giving
for God. I will deal with each of them in turn.